सिन्धी टी . वी . चैनल जी माँग

सिन्धी टी . वी . चैनल जी माँग जे लाय प्रधान मंत्री खे पोस्ट कार्ड अभियान खां पोय , सिन्धी संगत जे तरफा अदालत में
हिक पिटीशन कई वई आहे , इन लाय सिन्धी संगत हिक कानूनी नोटिस सूचना एं प्रसारण मन्त्रिय खे भी मोकिल्यो आहे ,
मशहूर वकील श्री राम जेठमलानी हिन मुकदमे जी पैरवी कंदों , वधीक जानकारीय लाय कल जे हिन्दुस्तान टाइम्स खे हिन
लिंक ते ऑनलाइन विजिट कयो :
yesterday
Hindustan Times - Manoj Nair has talked about our demand for DD Sindhi
Channel. Here is the report you may check online
http://paper.hindustantimes.com/epaper/viewer.aspx
A million postcards to save a language
Since March 2012, thousands of postcards addressed to the Prime
Minister’s Office in New Delhi have been sent from cities and small
towns in the country that has Sindhi-speaking residents. These
handwritten messages postcards, which have the names and telephone
numbers of the senders, have one demand: a Sindhi-language television
channel from government-run broadcaster Doordarshan.
Tens of
thousands of these cards have been posted from Mumbai too. One group –
the Bandra-based Friends of International Sindhis - collected Rs 60,000
at their Diwali function in 2012 and purchased 1,20,000 postcards priced
at 50 paise each.
Sindhi is one of the languages listed in the
8th schedule of the constitution, but with no linguistic state of their
own to keep it flourishing, the community worries that the tongue is
hurtling towards extinction.
Asha Chand, secretary of Sindhi
Sangat, a Mumbaibased group explains why they are worried about their
mother tongue’s future. “How do you learn a language? It is by hearing
someone speak it. Children learn a language by hearing their parents
talking it. But, when a large number of Sindhis have stopped speaking
the language, how will they pass it on to their children?” she asked.
After they migrated to India after partition, Sindhis set up newspapers
and schools in their language. But, as newer generations shifted to
schools in English and other languages, these newspapers and schools
have declined or closed down. For instance, the K J Khilnani School in
Mahim, which is situated next to large housing colony of
Sindhi-speakers, once held classes in the language. The school has now
switched to the English medium and few children from the housing colony
study there.
Since many young Sindhis may no longer hear the
language in their homes, activists like Chand feel that a television
channel is the best medium to keep the tongue alive. “Doordarshan runs
channels in Urdu without any sponsors. Why can’t they have a channel for
Sindhis who are spread across the country?” asked Chand.
Chand
first wrote to the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting in November
2007 asking for some Sindhilanguage programming on government
television till a 24hour channel could start. At one point, the Hinduja
Foundation of the Hinduja brothers of London was involved in the
campaign to get a government-run Sindhi television channel. The two most
powerful politicians from the community – jurist Ram Jethmalani and
former deputy prime minister L K Advani – were also part of the cause.
It is not that Sindhi is not heard on Indian television. There is a
bilingual television channel called ‘SindhiKachchhi’ that is telecast
from Adipur in Gujarat’s Kutch district where a large number of refugees
from Sind settled down after partition. The two languages are mutually
intelligible. There is also local cable channel that telecasts
programmes for a fee. But most Sindhi speakers, used to watching slicker
television programming in Hindi and English, find these offerings
amateurish.
Sindhis are not relying on the post card campaign
alone to get their 24-hour television channel. They have planned a writ
petition, and on Tuesday the Sindhi Sangat sent legal notices to the
Information and Broadcasting Ministry. Jethmalani will represent the
petitioners. Jethmalani, who is now in London, was not available for a
comment. His associate Ashish Dixit said, “As a linguistic minority, we
have a constitutional right to protect our language. The campaign to get
a television channel has not worked and we have no other option than a
writ petition,” said Dixit.
When asked why rich Sindhi business
houses cannot promote a television channel, Dixit said, “The Sindhi
businesses can contribute too, but the government has to take the lead.
It is their obligation.”
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